Doobie Doo
Veteran
99 Jaw-Dropping Facts That Will Make You Rethink Everything
From the real name of the hashtag to Chuck E. Cheese's sad origin story, here are 99 random facts that you'll probably tell your friends you already know.
by Mike Rothschild | 8.30.2019
(CBS via Getty Images)
Once you finish reading this, you may never eat another avocado again. And there's a 50-50 chance that Oreos will no longer be your family's favorite cookie.
Think you know everything there is to know about everything -- how to make ice, how to know if you have the stomach flu, and what the name of a hashtag really is? Not even close.
Here's an assembly of 99 ridiculously weird facts that will definitely make you rethink a few things -- if not everything.
"King of the Wasteland" Is Cool Too
Even though males are called the "king of the jungle," lions actually prefer scrublands and savannahs. The whole jungle mistake likely comes from a bad translation of the Hindi word "jangle," meaning wasteland.
Getty
Antarctica Calling!
Even though it's not an actual country, Antarctica has an international dialing code -- 672.
Getty
Pick Up Your Moon!
Between crashed probes, random spacecraft parts, one-time experiments, and a whole lot of bags of human waste, it's estimated that the moon contains about 400,000 pounds of trash.
Everybody Gets a Medal
From 1912 to 1948, the Olympics celebrated a lot more than sports. Like, for example, sculpture. And painting. There were also competitions for architecture and music composition, though many of the contests were chaotic and randomly didn't award medals if the judges didn't feel like it. Those categories were discontinued after the International Olympic Committee decided the artists were professionals, rather than amateurs.
Photo by Paul Mai/ullstein bild via Getty Images
“God Save the... Uh… Wait, I Know This”
The music from “The Star Spangled Banner” was taken from the traditional British drinking song, "To Anacreon in Heaven.” It also didn’t become America’s national anthem until 1931, when it replaced "America (My Country, 'Tis of Thee).” And that song isn't even an original. It took its music from England’s national anthem, “God Save the King.” Call it the original British Invasion.
Really, There Are More Than 100
The traditional tall white chef's hat has 100 folds in it, meant to represent the chef's maxim that there are 100 ways to cook an egg.
They Sound Cute, But They Aren't
The small pellets that are softened and molded to make plastic products are called "nurdles." Despite their cute name, nurdle pollution in the ocean is a major problem. One estimate says that 250,000 tons of nurdles enter the ocean every year.
(Photo by: Citizen of the Planet/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
It Wasn't Prime Eligible
The first item bought on Amazon.com by a non-staff member was a book on artificial intelligence called "Fluid Concepts And Creative Analogies: Computer Models Of The Fundamental Mechanisms Of Thought,” written by neuroscientist Douglas Hofstadter. The buyer was a computer scientist named John Wainwright, who had a building on Amazon's campus named in his honor. Wainwright says he still has the book.
Your Tax Dollars at Work
In 1990, all government agencies were given seven years to completely audit their budgets. The Department of Defense stalled on the audit for decades, then finally finished it in 2018. That audit cost $413 million and found massive errors... which cost another half a billion dollars to fix.
Eggs-cellent Marketing
Brown eggs and white eggs have no difference in quality, only cost. Brown eggs cost more because they come from red-feathered chickens, which need more food than white feathered chickens.
(Photo by: Natasha Breen/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Don't Try It At Home
Under certain conditions, hot water can freeze faster than cold water. This is called the "Mpemba Effect," after a schoolboy from Tanzania who determined that ice cream would freeze faster if it were already warm.
At Least There's No Jet Lag
Even though it spans five time zones, China has just one unified time. Beijing Standard Time puts the entire country on the same time as China's largest city. This means there are places in China where the sun rises at 11 a.m. and sets at midnight.
Jack the Ripper Can Have A Seat
The first serial killers in recorded American history were brothers Micajah and Wiley Harpe. The Harpe Brothers (who may have actually been cousins) murdered between 40 and 50 people in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Illinois from 1797 to 1799, usually horribly, and usually with knives. Their spree ended in 1799 when Micajah was killed by a posse. Wiley was captured and hanged four years later.
Public Domain
100% of Our Hearts
The myth that humans use just ten percent of their brain has been part of pop culture since the late 1920's. It has no basis in fact, and there is no evolutionary reason to have a brain mostly made of empty jelly.
Now That's East-West Fusion
Alaska is the westernmost state in America -- but it also has the country's most eastern point. The uninhabited island of Semisopochnoi is part of Alaska's Aleutian Islands, but crosses the International Date Line, and is technically in the Eastern Hemisphere.
No-Mobile-Phobia
The term "nomophobia" has been applied to the fear of being without one's cell phone. However, this is not a medically recognized condition.
Please Don't Tell Our Boss
Despite being the cause of countless sick days and excuses to get out of things, there is no such actual illness as “stomach flu.” Those stomach pains and nausea are actually gastroenteritis, which can be caused by anything from mild food poisoning to a virus.
(Photo by: BSIP/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Who's Next
During a Nov. 20, 1973 show in San Francisco, Keith Moon, the drummer for The Who, passed out. The Who needed help to finish their show. They called out for someone from the crowd to play drums, and 19-year-old Iowan Scot Halpin got the gig. He played three songs, and was given a tour jacket -- which someone promptly stole.
Milli Vanilli, 1 -- Led Zeppelin, 0
The number of Grammy Awards won by Chuck Berry, Bob Marley, KISS, Morrissey, Jimi Hendrix, Rush, the Kinks, the Who, the Velvet Underground, Queen, Led Zeppelin, and Journey totals zero. Several have won honorary awards, though.
It’s Still Better than “Password”
In 1962, President Kennedy ordered all nuclear commanders to add an eight-digit password to their launch computers. The Air Force, afraid that a crew member would waste time if they didn't know the password, made those digits “00000000.” The story was leaked by a former Air Force launch crew member, though the Pentagon disputed it.
(Photo by USAF/Getty Images)
We Can Totally See You (No We Can't)
Except for cases of extreme malnutrition, carrots don't help your eyesight. This myth was a piece of disinformation that the British circulated during World War II. The British didn't want the enemy to know they had secret radar tech that could spot Axis planes, so they lied and said that carrots gave their soldiers excellent eyesight. The Germans lost, but the myth won.
From the real name of the hashtag to Chuck E. Cheese's sad origin story, here are 99 random facts that you'll probably tell your friends you already know.
by Mike Rothschild | 8.30.2019

(CBS via Getty Images)
Once you finish reading this, you may never eat another avocado again. And there's a 50-50 chance that Oreos will no longer be your family's favorite cookie.
Think you know everything there is to know about everything -- how to make ice, how to know if you have the stomach flu, and what the name of a hashtag really is? Not even close.
Here's an assembly of 99 ridiculously weird facts that will definitely make you rethink a few things -- if not everything.
"King of the Wasteland" Is Cool Too
Even though males are called the "king of the jungle," lions actually prefer scrublands and savannahs. The whole jungle mistake likely comes from a bad translation of the Hindi word "jangle," meaning wasteland.

Getty
Antarctica Calling!
Even though it's not an actual country, Antarctica has an international dialing code -- 672.

Getty
Pick Up Your Moon!
Between crashed probes, random spacecraft parts, one-time experiments, and a whole lot of bags of human waste, it's estimated that the moon contains about 400,000 pounds of trash.
Everybody Gets a Medal
From 1912 to 1948, the Olympics celebrated a lot more than sports. Like, for example, sculpture. And painting. There were also competitions for architecture and music composition, though many of the contests were chaotic and randomly didn't award medals if the judges didn't feel like it. Those categories were discontinued after the International Olympic Committee decided the artists were professionals, rather than amateurs.

Photo by Paul Mai/ullstein bild via Getty Images
“God Save the... Uh… Wait, I Know This”
The music from “The Star Spangled Banner” was taken from the traditional British drinking song, "To Anacreon in Heaven.” It also didn’t become America’s national anthem until 1931, when it replaced "America (My Country, 'Tis of Thee).” And that song isn't even an original. It took its music from England’s national anthem, “God Save the King.” Call it the original British Invasion.
Really, There Are More Than 100
The traditional tall white chef's hat has 100 folds in it, meant to represent the chef's maxim that there are 100 ways to cook an egg.
They Sound Cute, But They Aren't
The small pellets that are softened and molded to make plastic products are called "nurdles." Despite their cute name, nurdle pollution in the ocean is a major problem. One estimate says that 250,000 tons of nurdles enter the ocean every year.

(Photo by: Citizen of the Planet/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
It Wasn't Prime Eligible
The first item bought on Amazon.com by a non-staff member was a book on artificial intelligence called "Fluid Concepts And Creative Analogies: Computer Models Of The Fundamental Mechanisms Of Thought,” written by neuroscientist Douglas Hofstadter. The buyer was a computer scientist named John Wainwright, who had a building on Amazon's campus named in his honor. Wainwright says he still has the book.
Your Tax Dollars at Work
In 1990, all government agencies were given seven years to completely audit their budgets. The Department of Defense stalled on the audit for decades, then finally finished it in 2018. That audit cost $413 million and found massive errors... which cost another half a billion dollars to fix.
Eggs-cellent Marketing
Brown eggs and white eggs have no difference in quality, only cost. Brown eggs cost more because they come from red-feathered chickens, which need more food than white feathered chickens.

(Photo by: Natasha Breen/REDA&CO/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Don't Try It At Home
Under certain conditions, hot water can freeze faster than cold water. This is called the "Mpemba Effect," after a schoolboy from Tanzania who determined that ice cream would freeze faster if it were already warm.
At Least There's No Jet Lag
Even though it spans five time zones, China has just one unified time. Beijing Standard Time puts the entire country on the same time as China's largest city. This means there are places in China where the sun rises at 11 a.m. and sets at midnight.
Jack the Ripper Can Have A Seat
The first serial killers in recorded American history were brothers Micajah and Wiley Harpe. The Harpe Brothers (who may have actually been cousins) murdered between 40 and 50 people in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Illinois from 1797 to 1799, usually horribly, and usually with knives. Their spree ended in 1799 when Micajah was killed by a posse. Wiley was captured and hanged four years later.

Public Domain
100% of Our Hearts
The myth that humans use just ten percent of their brain has been part of pop culture since the late 1920's. It has no basis in fact, and there is no evolutionary reason to have a brain mostly made of empty jelly.
Now That's East-West Fusion
Alaska is the westernmost state in America -- but it also has the country's most eastern point. The uninhabited island of Semisopochnoi is part of Alaska's Aleutian Islands, but crosses the International Date Line, and is technically in the Eastern Hemisphere.
No-Mobile-Phobia
The term "nomophobia" has been applied to the fear of being without one's cell phone. However, this is not a medically recognized condition.
Please Don't Tell Our Boss
Despite being the cause of countless sick days and excuses to get out of things, there is no such actual illness as “stomach flu.” Those stomach pains and nausea are actually gastroenteritis, which can be caused by anything from mild food poisoning to a virus.

(Photo by: BSIP/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Who's Next
During a Nov. 20, 1973 show in San Francisco, Keith Moon, the drummer for The Who, passed out. The Who needed help to finish their show. They called out for someone from the crowd to play drums, and 19-year-old Iowan Scot Halpin got the gig. He played three songs, and was given a tour jacket -- which someone promptly stole.
Milli Vanilli, 1 -- Led Zeppelin, 0
The number of Grammy Awards won by Chuck Berry, Bob Marley, KISS, Morrissey, Jimi Hendrix, Rush, the Kinks, the Who, the Velvet Underground, Queen, Led Zeppelin, and Journey totals zero. Several have won honorary awards, though.
It’s Still Better than “Password”
In 1962, President Kennedy ordered all nuclear commanders to add an eight-digit password to their launch computers. The Air Force, afraid that a crew member would waste time if they didn't know the password, made those digits “00000000.” The story was leaked by a former Air Force launch crew member, though the Pentagon disputed it.

(Photo by USAF/Getty Images)
We Can Totally See You (No We Can't)
Except for cases of extreme malnutrition, carrots don't help your eyesight. This myth was a piece of disinformation that the British circulated during World War II. The British didn't want the enemy to know they had secret radar tech that could spot Axis planes, so they lied and said that carrots gave their soldiers excellent eyesight. The Germans lost, but the myth won.